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the carolina watchman 01 x thihd series salisbury % c february 6 187 no 16 â– v itchnian 7 ) to jjillku yc'raii find bow other have done his o n sad exjmjriemvtg tell : â€ž in ilie world /Â« is left aloue . | . ']..,. â€¢ - .'â€¢'â– â€¢â– they feel very wt ii i h . oidei would feel like sheding a fear ,' ., .',, ..,â€¢ in thus tin ivu into grief â€¢ die rit'iidii ion of ' .' holler dear !,,,[, he w ill soon find relief . i /â€ž !-. one thing i nin sure ,,., m ininiiny shame he it said i ! j i ,,' ; i e iimld mu ranks failure , iu . none thai by him will be led l.,1 ,,,- in mv haste 1 hope tis iml true f j se uiutnkcii the s clothe writer l it thai !-â€¢â€¢ ihe case lei ine saj to von - ol i won't if you keep getting whiter ] eant nothing more than tliisjl will say | n ., | a ,â€ž| uli.n the grapes grow so high k mn'ii (; old ibx that was pass'ngthitl way fcould'm gcttheui they v sour he did cry i â– Â«, ps loiii live llie'rlnvnl old china rove -â€¢, i nh il stands by its creeÂ«l : vudseotlv al the man that to cupid would lllhv j for support nn hive's brittle reed i'm i jonks jit my uncle george i suppose you jfronder gflorgj why it s i have never married â€” wondcr l and most probably rejoiced for at death you know the old place . | come to y<m as it came to me i a from debt or incumueranee 1 inpposeyoii have attributed my con irmed lahtlnhood to some disap pointment in hÂ»ve in early life eh '.' vh well ; i'll tell you the whole tfor l may serve a _ warning lo on i was going to say only 1 do not j i in one man's experience being j lf nv use to another and as to rraming â€” bah ihey never serve j uiil i am in a retrospective mood to bi'-hit -> if you care to hear the story i roil shall my li 'â€¢'â€¢â– ( â– â€¢ orge and i were ay in up al i l.u ling.a small fishing-place i if lit n the ii ;^ : i i ; i ids t wbii li we j r i regularly twice a year iv-rj bout a ffiriuiglit in pursuit of sal j iiiu i had lost my fa i her when 1 \ las liiij vears old anil since thai imc his brother my uncle ieorge ;. my father in all but the name indeed 1 think we were fonder o bich itiier lhan fathers and sons usual v â– .;â€¢( in i hese d;:vs 1 has alwavs been a wonder to me nil every one else that uncle george lad never married some people de lared that he had been hojielessly ii ovewiihthe b cap ti ful duchess di , nd thai it was for her sake he had re haincd single j others hiuteil at some ntaiigletncnt j while some maiutaiu f boldly that sir george wyville h trried nnd thai 1 , lii nephew ir prcsum'ive in t hi eyes of the . diouhl look \ cry foolish some lay on ihe baronetcv and wyville . being i laitned by t he son ol liy tine'o's old college bed maker j'ut pall these stories l lijrnei a eal ear i knew enough of uncle uporge to feel sure that there was not â– shadow of truth in all of them my nele often spoke of the duchess le as what she was one o the andsomest women aud most finished bquettes ofher day but i felt cer ttin that he had never cured for her ic would not have talked so much bout her if he had and as to an en knglement or a secret marriage why knew all my unclc'g affairs as well b i knew those qfcharlie baynsford iy bosom friend and brother officer rho had been ga/.etted as ensign and ieuteuant in the l.'ifth foot guards he same day as myself about two don ths before no whatever reason ii uncle may have had for remaining ' gle it was one that he had carei'ul . guarded from the whole world i i&s glad that i was going to hear it t last 1 lit my pipe about the coloring if finch 1 was so anxious and draw hg mv chair nrarer to the fire pre pred to listen iii com hut i was about thirteen george when â€¢ first saw nora o'bryuc 1 was at paton then and she was a flower girl 1 the suvets of windsor the first n . v 1 ever saw her â€” i remember it as rc h as if it were yesterday â€” if wa a ptt rly cold march afternoon and she ' ; '- landing outside the then only iio l _ in the place selling violet to s hour 1 cannot stand seeing a girl hling violets in the street i gave her " the money i had in my pocket j my heart with it it is no ufe at ' tempting to describe her all de scriptions of real beauty are futile she wasthesiinplicst thelovliest child as she was afterwards the lovliest wo man i ever beheld day after day i used to see her i contrived to meet her quietly i did all i could fur her and it went to my heart to feci that * could do so little i used to give her food ; clothing it was of no use giv ing for her mother took it away again directly and pawned it to buy gin j need scarcely tell you that nora was no common beggar-girl her fa ther had been a v\eij-'<;-,dy workman and during his life-time she had been to school and had learned how to i read and write but after his death they had bec'ii reduced to beggary through her mother's fatal propensity â– for drink for nearly two years of j my life i spe^ft i.'v^ry shilling { could , snare upon that child and i loved ; her as i have e..ci loved any other human being and what is more i kept my boyish loved secret from every one â€” no co.*y maitcy as you may imagine w'e.i 1 was fifteen i had a bad iittack ui tvphus fever i was paying at wyville at the time of the summer vacation with my uncle sir rupert i he had a perfect horror of sickness j and of fevers especially aud directly ! i was taken iii h.c left the honce to pay a visit to some friend near wind sor he promised me that wjbpn the school met again he would ride over aud give tlje fellows at my house the latest accounts of me i did uot return eaton till af ter the christmas holidays and nora wan gon â€” whore i could i;ot learn in vain i made inquiries of different people iu ihe i\vn who knew the girl by sight all i could learn was that neither she nor her mother had been seen since the beginning of septem ber 1 was nearly frantic with anx ietv i give von ujy word george th:Â»t never lyi;l once again in my life i have 1 felt anything like the utter srriefand desolation of that time when i thought of nora with her ex traordinary beauty thrown upon the wide v orid y.;:h no other protection than that drunken old mother well time passed on and when i was eighteen i left eaton and went into the guards my mother took a house on hartford street and i lived with iier | went everywhere and was made much of i ig heir to wyville castle and fifteen thousand a yearâ€”^to say nothing of the baronetcy and i could have married â€” as my uncle and mother was always telling me â€” almost anybody i cljoose rut i did uot choose strang â€¢ as it may appear i neve diet a girl 1 pould care for â€” never met any one who could make'tne forget for one moment my childish love i grew tired of every thing sooner than most men and at twenty having obtained several mouths leave of absence i start pt for a tour iu the east with my old friend bayus ford who was then captain lellowes wo were at smyrna : i received a letter from my mother telling me that my uncle was gqiijg to be married as 1 had been taught from childhood to consider myself his heir you may fancy george with yhq.t filings of disgust | received the intelligence my mother wrote a very illegible ham and moreover always crossed her pages consequently deciplu ring her letter was no easy task | eoulf not make out the name of my uncle's fianocp although fellowes and i sat up half the night trying to discover it my mother said sir rupert had met her in paris and i thought the word wc could not decipher looked like a french name london was no place for me now i decided and determined to leave the guards and exchange into some regiment going to canada â€” a country i was particularly anxious to see we lingered a good deaj of the time on our way home and were a great part of our time in out-of-ihq-way places where we saw no newspapers thus i missed reading theaiiuoqeeiuent of my uncle's marriage when i arriv ed in town i heard nothing but the extraordinary beauty of lady wyville and many were the warnings x re ceived â€” dialfin jest â€” half in earnest â€” not to fall in love with my aunt it was very odd but i felt no curi osity to sco her on the contrary the idea of making her acquaintance ! was rather repugnant to nie i left a card for my uncle in gros 1 venor square a day or two after i ! returned home at an hour when i i knew s\i<i would be ou ; aud i de clined on the plea of a prior engage ment an invitation that i received to dine with them the follovingeyen ing a few nights afterwards there was a large i given at the russian em bassy i heard directly i entered the house thai my uncle and his bride was there but there was a great jc.j\vv ud i never caught sight of them towards the end of the even ing just as i was going away the duchess de came up to me in the conservatory and told me that my uncle and aunt w re just then on the staircase you must come and see her george she said to me ; she is perfectly beau tiful i made sump commonplace reply such as that it was only very pretty women who ever admitted beauty in others and then with the little duch ess on my arm i went to greet my un cle and his bride she was dressed all in white â€” n<?t ( the faintest trace of color about her â€” and her lovely face turned as whitens her bridal wreath as she came face to face with me it was nora â€” nora whom i had last seen in rags bare footed asking alms from the passer by and now met again thus â€” at an ambassador's ball and talking to a foreign prince ! my uncle introduced me to his bride and i made a profound bow and w;th face as white as her own congratulated her on her marriage and expressed the gratification i felt in making her acquaintance she gave ine such a look poor girl i knew then that she had never for gottou me i passed on with the duchess into the ball-room and i felt rather than saw that nora turned to look after us is she not beautiful ?" my com panion asked me with levity ah i was right i could sec you were des perately apri with her what is it you ejngfish call i love at first sight take my advice mon ami and do not see too much of your lovely aunt i shall follow your a vice i said t mca to see as little ofher as possi ble something in ny voice madp my companion glance up and then with true tact and good breeding she has tened to change the subject she was a kind hearted little woman in spite of her trifling language i knew that never again to me or any living being did she recur to what she had noticed more than she chose to say i felt cer tain i never saw nora again so as to speak to her during unele's lifetime i exchanged at once into a rcginiei t under orders for canada tljepo i re mained three years uqtjl the death of sir rupert recalled me to england nora had no children s i was now sir george wyville slip might as well have waited for me i thought bitterly i met her once at our soli citor's upon business just after my re turn home and that was the iasj time l ever saw her in the world she lived entirely in loudon doing an immense deal of good x believe among the irish poor but her career Â« f useful ness was a short one she only sur vived sir rupert four years to me she dieil the hour when she became his wife siie wrote to me once after she became a widow telling me ail the circumstances of the marriage â€” how that sir rupert had rescued her from a life of beggary in the streets and sent her to schoql for four years and that then she had felt herself bound in honor and gratitude to marry him she concluded her letter by ex pres sing a hope tint we might still be friends friends ! i had no more friendship to offer her than i had love to offer any woman : and my un cle's widow was sacred in my eyes j never saw nora again i believe the world talked a good deal about my strange conduct to wards my aunt and pronounced it to be very bad taste now th:\t i had come into the title ami estate qnly the duchess de , gave mc credit for having some good reason for thus j avoiding lady wyville there george you know now the ! story of my life â€” why i have remain ed a bachelor all my days i was not j aware that there is any particular moral to be deduced from my tale un ! less it is only to fall iu jgve io your j own rank of life a piece of advice that was very frequently given to me j when i was young i hope you will ' profit by it better than j have done i boiled cracked wheat is an un surpassed breakfast dish if rigidly \ cooked everything depends upon j that it is more economical for farm i era to use their own wheat than to buy the prepared article after the ' - . " i wheat is cleaned and dried it may be j coarsely ground in acoftee-mill this i also is made like a mush butiliould i be cooked carefully as corn mush â€” from two to four hours it requires frequent stirring to be kept from burn ing whenxione fill a dozen â€” or less â€” teacjlms rather more tban half full of the mush let stand until cold turn out of the molds careful ly into the dessert plates or arrange all on a platter which may be placed i on the tabic and served from that as j desired eat with a sauce of sugar and cream delicious of course all \ mushes require a seasoning of salt while being cooked wheat so pre pared forms also a nice dessert for dinner a slice of jelly served with it adds to its delicacy lbr j^iiie nal i atcs short stories for " tribune headers new v.irk world a man who had irons out fishing . i caught several splendid bass which : he promptly thr-'-w back into the river being remonstrated with for this apparently foolish act he re plied : 1 take no interest in bass i came u,it to catch catfish and when i come out for catfish 1 want catfish a hunter after long following a grizzly bear in the direction of its den suddenly abandoned his pursuit and when questioned a to his motive for doing so said that the trail was get ting too fresh a frenchman who had been to india being interrogated as to the pleasures of the chase replied : oh ze tigairc-hunting â€” zat is a sport mag nifique wjiere ze frenchman hunt z tisruire but when ze tiiraire hunt ze frenchman â€” pnrbleu zat is quite anoz/cr zing !" old howe the wisconsin iiadipal senator who is eternally hating find howling at the south will soon go into that obs urity he so richly mer its h is successor matt carpenter is as brilliant as howe isdiill llercr cently arrived in washington and was received with a display of electric lights cannon tiring speech making c carpenter recently spoke in con cilitary terms but thei he is fqp grant 1 17 star the next great issue the currency question and other issues may come up in 1880 but un questionably if the signs of the times are correct the great issue of the next presidential campaign and not of that only but of the next decade perhaps in our political history will be the old historical one of the rights of the states versus the idea of ceutralisoj wil sun tho legislature qf louisiana has called a cunycr,tiun to frame a new constitqtjqn for tljat state dele gates are to be chosen march 18th and the convention is to meet in new orleans april 21st curiosity li 1 moseley of brown's warehouse exhibited some beautiful spe cimens of picture rock to us ou satur day hist the impressions on the surface of the stone represent landscapes and a mong the number as yet unearthed was found a beautiful view of niagara falls these pictures are supposed to have been reflected on the clouds and then photo graphed on the rock by crude chemicals in the quarry from which the stones were ta ken the surface on which the photo graph appears is smooth and hard and the picture indelible â€” bob's specimens were sent to him from randolph county near new market where a large quarry of the rook has been discovered on the surface of each strata are found different views well executed and pretty to look upon â€” salem pecs one-half to the informant in view of the interest taken in remov ing the 40 lashes save v ; ne for petty of fences wt lake from the charlottesville chronicle the following amusing story of how it was administered in virginia in the good old times in colonial rimes when col archibald cary was a magistrate living at williams burg i man who was much disliked by his neighbors on account of his viudict iveness and general meaness came before the old colonel and informed him that his neighbor john brown had violated the game law by kijbug a deer before the 1st of september now although brown was a good honest poor raau fnn.ch es teemed by his acquaintances esquire ca ry was bo it d to issue a warrant for his arrest and when brown appeared before him he confessed that he had killed tin deer knowing at the time that he was vi olating the law ; but that his wife had a great longing for venison and knowing that deer daily frequented his corn-field she gave him no peace lie had begged her to wait a little ; till the 1st of september but she vowed she could not wait so he killed the deer the old magistrate seeming full of compassion said : brown the law is explicit you will have to pay the line which is 5 lord bless your heart col can said brown all i have on earth would not sell for 5 well then said the justice turning to the law and reading without paying strict attention to punctuation or the ex act position of the words whoever shall be guilty of shooting snaring trapping or in any way killing a deer within this his majesty's colony of virginia at any time between the 1st of may and the 1st of september shall pay a fine of im and it he is nuable to do this the punishment shall be awarded of jp lashes on the bare back jfj.'lj jaid on one-half to be given to the informant and the other half to the king mr constable said his honor as we are enjoined to do justice and love mercy and where an odd amount which is not capable of an equal division is to be divided between a rich and a poor mail 1 always give the poor man the larger share you will therefore give the infor mant in this case the 20 lashes and when ever yoi catch his majesty tiie king in this colony you will then give him the 19 so the majesty of the law was main tained much to the satisfaction of all who knew the odious informant another deadly habit from de x y tribune a dangerous method of tisjng morphine to produce pleasurable sensations is bc lieved by physicians in this city to be a growing vice morphine js one of the principle constituents of opium and has the effect of relieving pain and preventing sleeplessness it has been found how ever that frequent internal doses of the drug had an injurious effect ou the intes tinal canal and gradually undermined the system of late years physicians have nearly abam]oned the practice of admin istering morphine by iuterual doses and have adopted instead the use of a needle pointed syringe by which small doses of the drngg are injected under iii kia the effect of the drug administered in this way is much quicker and smaller doses are required the use of the morphia syir inge was confined to medical experts for a time as it was believed to be attended with unusual dangers in unskillful hands it has becoipe a pratice with some phy sicians however to teach their patients how to administer morphia injections and it is not surprising that many psrsons who have x|ierienced the delightful ef fects of the drug in tims of sickness should use the instrument to banish im aginary suffering sevepd prominent physicians of this city were vjsjted by a tribune reporter recently and their stater ments showed that the vicious habit i6 spreading to an alarming sxtent a strong opposirjon to tip frequent use of the nprpliia syringe was expressed by dr jared liusly at is an instrument of death he said in the hands of any person except a skillful and cautious phy sician if tiie use of the instrument is ever justified it pj in cases where immi diate relief must be given to excruciating pain whenever morphine can be given in internal doses i believe it should be administered in that way a dose of the drug injected under the skin is taken up bv the blood carried to the heart and dis t seminated through the system with great rapidity the effect on the vital organs is all the more hurtful because of its s:nl denness and because the imparities of thedrugare conveyed directly into the blood it is not surprisiqg that many deaths have resulted directly from the mode of adninistering ansethetics it is a crime for a physician to teach t:>f use of such an instrument to his patients tho practice is sending hundred of persons to the inebriate asylums aal filling thou sands of homes with misery a smile costs the giver nothing yet it is beyond price to the erring and repent ant the sad and cheerless the lost and forsaken ic disarms malice subdues temper turns enmity to love revenge to kindness and paves the darkest paths w ith gems of sanlight something of a village | london is the greatest city tlie world ever saw it is the heart of the british empire and the world it covers within ' j the fifteen miles radius of charing cross ' nearly seven hundred square miles ir j numbers within these boundaries 1,000 600 inhabitants it comprises 100,000 : foreigners from every quarter of the globe i it contains more roman catholics than rome itself more jews tban the whole i of palestine more irish than dublin i inure scotch than edinburgh more : welshmen tryuj canliff and more conn iaiy-burn persons than the counties of de ! von warwickshire and durham eombin j led has a birth every five minates has : a death in m i-vfcry eight minutes ibis j seven acddsitfs every day in its 7,000 : j miles of street has ou au average twen j ty eight miles of new streets opened and i 9,00qjaew houses built iu it every year . has 1*^8 persons every day and 5,q00 ad ded t its population every year lias 1 000 ships and fÂ»,(k)0 sailors in its port er ery day ; has 47,(wg habitual criminals on its police register inenuisjng a jrj ay erage of 3o,qq0 per annum ; has mine than one-third of all the crime in the country ' committed in it has as many beer shops aud is palaces as would if placed side by side stretch from charing cross to portsmouth a distance of seven ty-three miles ; has js,(}!!0 drunkards annually brought before its magistrates : has as many paupers as would more than occu | | jiy every house in brighton : has upwards | of a million habitual eegleters of public ! wor.-hip lnis 00 miles of open simps eve ; , ry lord's day ; has neeij of im new ; : churches and additional city mission ! aries ; has au jnguimcfl with all parts of 1 the world represented by the yearly i!e livery in it of 238,000,000 of letters a east young 3!an ths carter of a ysuiig man who has just pome to grief iu si louis affords a pretty fail illustration ef the shame to which ri otous living and profligate associations will bring a lad the touih in question wam the son of a well-to-do merchant and ; bome time ago having manifested a de i sir to reform was made his father's con i tideutial clerk the moment however i ; ; he received this mark of confidence he ' deliberately instituted a system of false ; entries in the books and iii the course of i a few months embezzled nearly Â£? 10,000 i . . . i which he spent in gambling wine and dissolute company when the day of reckoning came so mmh incensed was his father that he disowned the boy and threw his trunk out after him into the street a few days later the son returned home surreptitiously to get some inouey from his mother aud while there liis father as he was entering the house fell and broke a limb which necessitated his retiring to bed and sending for a physician in the i confusion he left his coat in a pocket of which was j,u0u in cash in au adjoin ing room and his ungrateful son took the opportunity to steal it that sanis night e was robbed pf every cent in a low re sort during a drunken spree he is now in charge of the police authorities with plenty of lejsun for repentance the bhidk axdher dowsjv a cler gyman was sent for to visit a girl who was seriously ill the illness proved fatal and the mother was left bereaved for her child as well is bnsband a few ilaysafterber child's funeral the widow railed and re quested tttsee the clergyman she put into his hand a small packet containing money which rdiu begged he would give to some society which w:;s sending the gosjiel to the heathen world he opened the parcel and to his amazement counted out twenty dollars he remonstrated with the widow told her that gaining her precarious living as a laundress s::r"ly ought not to so large a sum with ti mnos she urged him to take it and then said j|o\v 1 tome to have this huge sum isjusf this when mv child was born i thought shell live to get married some f these days and i thought i would begin t-j pat by a little iim to be a store for her then aud i began that day with sixpence von know what happened last week well i thought to myself th heavenly i'.ii'.f groom has come and he ha called her homo to be his bride and as he has taki i the bride it is only ri^hi he should lave the dowry *' -Â«*- ax ootraqbocsi/i i'i i.-m el.ectlos mr 1 c n'ttl.rr.ji cqjtcd states dis trict au-.rney ffjr south carolina in h letter to wm pressly i nited states superrisorof abberville county a^kr-Â«l him to furnish ma terial ti -: ; :. .<:;'. such as can he used in court concerning the conduct oftherecent cm gressionaj election 1 and the names of wit nesses t the u=e of violence mtimidation r.r fraud th " " lt - r - prassley under d ' january 2d rcplie that 1 â€¢ i q republican l,..t was never cbmmission*d*5uperri there was no violence orintim lotion at the the ever saw â€¢ an t i ib dy trie > si â– i 13k him - was o re can ti t in the fie at nii : till !!â€¢ - ' '' ' ' . gethcr tv nt the 1 ' appears to hai oiitragcoualy peaceful and the teller com mittcc ihoula im sstigate the matter governors salaries alabama pays 3,000 connecticut & 000 iowa 3,000 kansas 3,000 maine 2^00,'michigan$l,000 minnesota 000 nebraska 2^500 new hampshiro$l ooo oregon 1,500 south carolina 3,500 vermont ju0q0 west virginia sÂ»,70o arkansas 3,000 georgia mo st pros peronsofsoothern states pays 4,000 illinois with three times the wealth imputation f north carolina pars but 6,000 missouri double as large and as rich pa^n^ooe ohio with its threi and a quarter million people pays but 84,000 xew vork worttli twenty tiroes as much as north ( arolina can afford to pay 10,000 if north carolina should pay its governor 8a.uiio and furnish him a home it will be doing as well in propor tion as the most of the large and prospe rous states wilmington star honest young men t the front li i safe to predict that we are now on the very threshold of ihe most prosperous eia one of progress in all the arts and ame lioration in all the conditions of bocjety that has ever been witnessed on this con tinent pay no heed to the croakers and prophets of evil they an ft despair ing class who have lost their hold upon even thing or nave passi d their da . and are without hope these nun well be told to stand aside and not obstruct the wav to the more hopeful and particularly to the more youthful who in the vigor of their strength and glory of their maul d have the courage to go i'm waul and fight their way through to victory this i their opportunity and if we know the young men of america it is one they will not sutler to pass or escape them unim proved â€” richmond state 1'lorida election t jacksonville jan 22 the jurj in the case of the brevard county canvass ing board for making false return of the late congressional elections brought iu a verdict of guilty with a recommendation of mercy iu the case of ihe sheriff and justice of the peace the county can vassing board and two inspectors of the late election from alachua county were arrested to-day on the charge ef violation pf electi ni laws vmx laws pro â– â– â– become a necessity sin â– â– thi w ar in tl states when guns and risking tackle irc in the hands of the indolent i he g fields and streams is verj neai destruction not only the men who cati h for the purpose of shipping and iii â– _. bul less sportsmen who exercisi no rational trol over their pastimes ought to be kept within stringent limits will oui i ture give the sul ationi hal observer ni:w cotton ri i.k ft mai b â€¢' i i to th < itton trad ii pending jn new york cotton km ii which provides that sis bands or ropes exceeding twelve pounds in the averagi be considered sufficient for each bale of cot ton aiiui ' i be removed before - r a prop r a ancc made for it â€” -.<Â»-Â» â€” â€” ( oncord ban .- the c dtou factory in this dace owned aud run by the odcll m .. u ing ( lompany i one of tin mo u extensive establishments ol iii l.ind in the state a considerable quantity of new machinery has been added recently aud under the able management of ihe udells tbe present capacity for turning out the various fabrics is second to none we donbt whether or not oar people ful ly realize what they have in the posses sion in their midst of such a concern a valuable officer the lawyers are having a tine time over smith & forbes store a mr reynolds of boston took possession of the store as assiguee ai constable mo i.are haying a number of judgments from other northern creditors acting un â€¢!:-. legal advice broke open the window and walked iu tkprc was no breach of the peace though a large and c crowd thronged the door i ne charlotte obsei â– â€¢ r fisbj ug is di a last res ' i man the richmond v ts tq stocking all oar streams with fn sah because the natural southern ii-disposi tion to labor might lie increased b this means and dabbling iu '.'..:â– well stocked streams our people might cease tu i in trivc to labor and io save v ith a view to j thej'.il'.'.c â€” k ' it would be a unci r sigh to co the legislature elude the danger thai threat ens the pel diem aftei having retrenched every official uc of existence mu wouldn't it kal ' â€¢ the hist of the rah igli obsen rr's i in road articles states that ofthe a counties in the stute 1 ...â– railway hues in oj it is learned that v ork on h wi and salem ami mo begin ! " - â€¢ . 'â€¢ â– . - : i i (.â– i m.i dead john i kifklandj esq of hillsboro ii"l ii his home oq â€¢ ihe iith inst at the age ul 75 j cans

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the carolina watchman 01 x thihd series salisbury % c february 6 187 no 16 â– v itchnian 7 ) to jjillku yc'raii find bow other have done his o n sad exjmjriemvtg tell : â€ž in ilie world /Â« is left aloue . | . ']..,. â€¢ - .'â€¢'â– â€¢â– they feel very wt ii i h . oidei would feel like sheding a fear ,' ., .',, ..,â€¢ in thus tin ivu into grief â€¢ die rit'iidii ion of ' .' holler dear !,,,[, he w ill soon find relief . i /â€ž !-. one thing i nin sure ,,., m ininiiny shame he it said i ! j i ,,' ; i e iimld mu ranks failure , iu . none thai by him will be led l.,1 ,,,- in mv haste 1 hope tis iml true f j se uiutnkcii the s clothe writer l it thai !-â€¢â€¢ ihe case lei ine saj to von - ol i won't if you keep getting whiter ] eant nothing more than tliisjl will say | n ., | a ,â€ž| uli.n the grapes grow so high k mn'ii (; old ibx that was pass'ngthitl way fcould'm gcttheui they v sour he did cry i â– Â«, ps loiii live llie'rlnvnl old china rove -â€¢, i nh il stands by its creeÂ«l : vudseotlv al the man that to cupid would lllhv j for support nn hive's brittle reed i'm i jonks jit my uncle george i suppose you jfronder gflorgj why it s i have never married â€” wondcr l and most probably rejoiced for at death you know the old place . | come to y if you care to hear the story i roil shall my li 'â€¢'â€¢â– ( â– â€¢ orge and i were ay in up al i l.u ling.a small fishing-place i if lit n the ii ;^ : i i ; i ids t wbii li we j r i regularly twice a year iv-rj bout a ffiriuiglit in pursuit of sal j iiiu i had lost my fa i her when 1 \ las liiij vears old anil since thai imc his brother my uncle ieorge ;. my father in all but the name indeed 1 think we were fonder o bich itiier lhan fathers and sons usual v â– .;â€¢( in i hese d;:vs 1 has alwavs been a wonder to me nil every one else that uncle george lad never married some people de lared that he had been hojielessly ii ovewiihthe b cap ti ful duchess di , nd thai it was for her sake he had re haincd single j others hiuteil at some ntaiigletncnt j while some maiutaiu f boldly that sir george wyville h trried nnd thai 1 , lii nephew ir prcsum'ive in t hi eyes of the . diouhl look \ cry foolish some lay on ihe baronetcv and wyville . being i laitned by t he son ol liy tine'o's old college bed maker j'ut pall these stories l lijrnei a eal ear i knew enough of uncle uporge to feel sure that there was not â– shadow of truth in all of them my nele often spoke of the duchess le as what she was one o the andsomest women aud most finished bquettes ofher day but i felt cer ttin that he had never cured for her ic would not have talked so much bout her if he had and as to an en knglement or a secret marriage why knew all my unclc'g affairs as well b i knew those qfcharlie baynsford iy bosom friend and brother officer rho had been ga/.etted as ensign and ieuteuant in the l.'ifth foot guards he same day as myself about two don ths before no whatever reason ii uncle may have had for remaining ' gle it was one that he had carei'ul . guarded from the whole world i i&s glad that i was going to hear it t last 1 lit my pipe about the coloring if finch 1 was so anxious and draw hg mv chair nrarer to the fire pre pred to listen iii com hut i was about thirteen george when â€¢ first saw nora o'bryuc 1 was at paton then and she was a flower girl 1 the suvets of windsor the first n . v 1 ever saw her â€” i remember it as rc h as if it were yesterday â€” if wa a ptt rly cold march afternoon and she ' ; '- landing outside the then only iio l _ in the place selling violet to s hour 1 cannot stand seeing a girl hling violets in the street i gave her " the money i had in my pocket j my heart with it it is no ufe at ' tempting to describe her all de scriptions of real beauty are futile she wasthesiinplicst thelovliest child as she was afterwards the lovliest wo man i ever beheld day after day i used to see her i contrived to meet her quietly i did all i could fur her and it went to my heart to feci that * could do so little i used to give her food ; clothing it was of no use giv ing for her mother took it away again directly and pawned it to buy gin j need scarcely tell you that nora was no common beggar-girl her fa ther had been a v\eij-'f use of such an instrument to his patients tho practice is sending hundred of persons to the inebriate asylums aal filling thou sands of homes with misery a smile costs the giver nothing yet it is beyond price to the erring and repent ant the sad and cheerless the lost and forsaken ic disarms malice subdues temper turns enmity to love revenge to kindness and paves the darkest paths w ith gems of sanlight something of a village | london is the greatest city tlie world ever saw it is the heart of the british empire and the world it covers within ' j the fifteen miles radius of charing cross ' nearly seven hundred square miles ir j numbers within these boundaries 1,000 600 inhabitants it comprises 100,000 : foreigners from every quarter of the globe i it contains more roman catholics than rome itself more jews tban the whole i of palestine more irish than dublin i inure scotch than edinburgh more : welshmen tryuj canliff and more conn iaiy-burn persons than the counties of de ! von warwickshire and durham eombin j led has a birth every five minates has : a death in m i-vfcry eight minutes ibis j seven acddsitfs every day in its 7,000 : j miles of street has ou au average twen j ty eight miles of new streets opened and i 9,00qjaew houses built iu it every year . has 1*^8 persons every day and 5,q00 ad ded t its population every year lias 1 000 ships and fÂ»,(k)0 sailors in its port er ery day ; has 47,(wg habitual criminals on its police register inenuisjng a jrj ay erage of 3o,qq0 per annum ; has mine than one-third of all the crime in the country ' committed in it has as many beer shops aud is palaces as would if placed side by side stretch from charing cross to portsmouth a distance of seven ty-three miles ; has js,(}!!0 drunkards annually brought before its magistrates : has as many paupers as would more than occu | | jiy every house in brighton : has upwards | of a million habitual eegleters of public ! wor.-hip lnis 00 miles of open simps eve ; , ry lord's day ; has neeij of im new ; : churches and additional city mission ! aries ; has au jnguimcfl with all parts of 1 the world represented by the yearly i!e livery in it of 238,000,000 of letters a east young 3!an ths carter of a ysuiig man who has just pome to grief iu si louis affords a pretty fail illustration ef the shame to which ri otous living and profligate associations will bring a lad the touih in question wam the son of a well-to-do merchant and ; bome time ago having manifested a de i sir to reform was made his father's con i tideutial clerk the moment however i ; ; he received this mark of confidence he ' deliberately instituted a system of false ; entries in the books and iii the course of i a few months embezzled nearly Â£? 10,000 i . . . i which he spent in gambling wine and dissolute company when the day of reckoning came so mmh incensed was his father that he disowned the boy and threw his trunk out after him into the street a few days later the son returned home surreptitiously to get some inouey from his mother aud while there liis father as he was entering the house fell and broke a limb which necessitated his retiring to bed and sending for a physician in the i confusion he left his coat in a pocket of which was j,u0u in cash in au adjoin ing room and his ungrateful son took the opportunity to steal it that sanis night e was robbed pf every cent in a low re sort during a drunken spree he is now in charge of the police authorities with plenty of lejsun for repentance the bhidk axdher dowsjv a cler gyman was sent for to visit a girl who was seriously ill the illness proved fatal and the mother was left bereaved for her child as well is bnsband a few ilaysafterber child's funeral the widow railed and re quested tttsee the clergyman she put into his hand a small packet containing money which rdiu begged he would give to some society which w:;s sending the gosjiel to the heathen world he opened the parcel and to his amazement counted out twenty dollars he remonstrated with the widow told her that gaining her precarious living as a laundress s::r"ly ought not to so large a sum with ti mnos she urged him to take it and then said j|o\v 1 tome to have this huge sum isjusf this when mv child was born i thought shell live to get married some f these days and i thought i would begin t-j pat by a little iim to be a store for her then aud i began that day with sixpence von know what happened last week well i thought to myself th heavenly i'.ii'.f groom has come and he ha called her homo to be his bride and as he has taki i the bride it is only ri^hi he should lave the dowry *' -Â«*- ax ootraqbocsi/i i'i i.-m el.ectlos mr 1 c n'ttl.rr.ji cqjtcd states dis trict au-.rney ffjr south carolina in h letter to wm pressly i nited states superrisorof abberville county a^kr-Â«l him to furnish ma terial ti -: ; :. . si â– i 13k him - was o re can ti t in the fie at nii : till !!â€¢ - ' '' ' ' . gethcr tv nt the 1 ' appears to hai oiitragcoualy peaceful and the teller com mittcc ihoula im sstigate the matter governors salaries alabama pays 3,000 connecticut & 000 iowa 3,000 kansas 3,000 maine 2^00,'michigan$l,000 minnesota 000 nebraska 2^500 new hampshiro$l ooo oregon 1,500 south carolina 3,500 vermont ju0q0 west virginia sÂ»,70o arkansas 3,000 georgia mo st pros peronsofsoothern states pays 4,000 illinois with three times the wealth imputation f north carolina pars but 6,000 missouri double as large and as rich pa^n^ooe ohio with its threi and a quarter million people pays but 84,000 xew vork worttli twenty tiroes as much as north ( arolina can afford to pay 10,000 if north carolina should pay its governor 8a.uiio and furnish him a home it will be doing as well in propor tion as the most of the large and prospe rous states wilmington star honest young men t the front li i safe to predict that we are now on the very threshold of ihe most prosperous eia one of progress in all the arts and ame lioration in all the conditions of bocjety that has ever been witnessed on this con tinent pay no heed to the croakers and prophets of evil they an ft despair ing class who have lost their hold upon even thing or nave passi d their da . and are without hope these nun well be told to stand aside and not obstruct the wav to the more hopeful and particularly to the more youthful who in the vigor of their strength and glory of their maul d have the courage to go i'm waul and fight their way through to victory this i their opportunity and if we know the young men of america it is one they will not sutler to pass or escape them unim proved â€” richmond state 1'lorida election t jacksonville jan 22 the jurj in the case of the brevard county canvass ing board for making false return of the late congressional elections brought iu a verdict of guilty with a recommendation of mercy iu the case of ihe sheriff and justice of the peace the county can vassing board and two inspectors of the late election from alachua county were arrested to-day on the charge ef violation pf electi ni laws vmx laws pro â– â– â– become a necessity sin â– â– thi w ar in tl states when guns and risking tackle irc in the hands of the indolent i he g fields and streams is verj neai destruction not only the men who cati h for the purpose of shipping and iii â– _. bul less sportsmen who exercisi no rational trol over their pastimes ought to be kept within stringent limits will oui i ture give the sul ationi hal observer ni:w cotton ri i.k ft mai b â€¢' i i to th < itton trad ii pending jn new york cotton km ii which provides that sis bands or ropes exceeding twelve pounds in the averagi be considered sufficient for each bale of cot ton aiiui ' i be removed before - r a prop r a ancc made for it â€” -.